Eric Holder’s Stand Your Ground Squirrel
By Michelle Malkin
MichelleMalkin.com
Welcome to the Obama administration’s
cringe-inducing non sequitur of the week. On
Tuesday, Attorney General Eric Holder continued
stoking the fires of racial resentment over a
Florida jury’s acquittal of George Zimmerman. In an
address to NAACP leaders, who are demanding federal
intervention, Holder attacked Stand Your Ground
self-defense laws.
All together now: Squirrel!
“Separate and apart from the (Trayvon Martin) case
that has drawn the nation’s attention, it’s time to
question laws that senselessly expand the concept of
self-defense and sow dangerous conflict in our
neighborhoods,” Holder opined. He then baselessly
claimed that such laws are creating “more violence
than they prevent” and used his platform to promote
citizens’ “duty to retreat.”
So, what exactly do Stand Your Ground laws have to
do with Zimmerman and Martin? Absolutely nothing, of
course. Outside your own home, common principles of
self-defense dictate that unless you have reasonable
fear of deadly force or harm, you must flee if
possible rather than use deadly force. But a “duty
to retreat” rests on the ability to retreat. And
“duty to retreat” was irrelevant in Zimmerman’s case
because — pinned to the ground with Martin on top of
him, bashing his head on the concrete — he was
unable to retreat.
This didn’t stop the NAACP crowd from cheering their
heads off when Holder tossed out his red meat.
Holder’s racial-grievance-mongering agenda has also
been bolstered by media propaganda outlets, who’ve
been dutifully bashing Stand Your Ground regardless
of the facts.
The New York Times, for example, falsely claimed in
an editorial preceding Holder’s speech that the jury
“reached its verdict after having been asked to
consider Mr. Zimmerman’s actions in light of the
now-notorious Stand Your Ground provision in
Florida’s self-defense law.” Rolling Stone made a
similarly inflammatory claim, calling Martin a
“victim of Florida’s Stand Your Ground law.”
All nonsense. The jury received standard
instructions. Zimmerman did not invoke the Stand
Your Ground provision. Zimmerman later waived his
right to a pretrial immunity hearing under the Stand
Your Ground procedures.
And as National Review’s Sterling Beard points out,
“The only time Stand Your Ground came up during the
trial proper was when a prosecution witness stated
that he’d taught a class Zimmerman had attended that
covered Stand Your Ground.”
Even the prosecution rejects the cynical attempt to
tie Martin’s death to Stand Your Ground. Prosecutor
John Guy couldn’t have made it clearer during the
trial: “This case is not about standing your
ground.” During their post-trial press conference,
as conservative talk show host Victoria Taft first
noted, a Miami Herald reporter asked the prosecution
team specifically whether Stand Your Ground
“affected the facts in this case and whether this
case could have been won, perhaps, pre the changes
in the law.”
Prosecutor Bernie De La Rionda replied: “You know,
self-defense has existed for a long time. And we’ve
dealt with it in Jackson for a long time. We’ve
tried a lot of self-defense cases; I’ve personally
tried 10-15 self-defense cases. They’re tough cases,
but we accept it so … the law really hasn’t changed
all that much. Stand Your Ground was a big thing,
but really the law hasn’t changed. We have a right
to bear arms and a right to self defense.”
In short, Stand Your Ground did not kill Trayvon
Martin. Stand Your Ground did not sway the jury.
Stand Your Ground saboteurs don’t have a leg to
stand on. Columnist Jacob Sullum observed drily:
“You might think that, given all we now know about
Zimmerman’s actual defense, critics of ‘stand your
ground’ laws would have to find a different, more
apposite case to illustrate their concerns. Instead
they just barrel along, citing the same phony
example again and again, without regard to the
facts. It does not inspire confidence in their
argument.”
Nope, it inspires exasperation and contempt. Once
again, Eric Holder’s Department of Selective and
Social Justice is grasping for straws. Holder now
vows to “continue to fight for removal of Stand Your
Ground laws” that had nothing to do with the
Zimmerman trial. He promises to ban “racial
profiling” in the aftermath of a local crime
incident that — according to Holder’s own FBI
employees — had nothing to do with race.
This is all a transparent pretext, of course, for
undermining a plethora of state laws enacted by
pro-Second Amendment legislatures. (Never mind that
eight of 15 states that adopted Stand Your Ground
legislation were helmed by Democratic governors at
the time of passage.) Even more insidiously,
left-wing groups have exploited the Martin case to
launch broader attacks on the political speech and
activities of limited-government groups like the
American Legislative Exchange Council, which
supported Stand Your Ground.
The Obama administration’s cynical campaign against
Stand Your Ground laws is a racially charged weapon
of mass distraction. The goal isn’t public safety or
community harmony. The goal is for conservative
political opponents to Surrender Your Ground.
Silence, as always, is complicity. Political
self-defense, as with physical self-defense, begins
with self-assertion.
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